Bolton 0 Cardiff City 1: Campbell comes off the bench to save Solskjaer's blushes again

Manchester United manager David Moyes left Bolton knowing he cannot ignore any supersubs sent on by Ole Gunnar Solskjaer.

Moyes can ill-afford further embarrassment at Old Trafford on Tuesday against Cardiff after losing to Sunderland in the Capital One Cup.

But the threat is there, and not necessarily from the starting line-up. Fraizer Campbell had barely been on the pitch for five minutes when fellow substitute Craig Noone’s hopeful cross seemed an easy catch for Andy Lonergan but he spilt the ball like an England cricketer.

Super sub: Frazier Campbell (2L) came on after half-time to score in Cardiff's 1-0 win against Bolton

Souper strike: Campbell (R) fires in from close range on 49minutes in the FA Cup Fifth Round tie at the Reebok Stadium

Saved blushes: Ole Gunnar Solskjaer (2L) congratulates Frazier Campbell after he came on to score the winner for a second time

Campbell accepted the invitation to
score and ensured that he and Noone were heroes again, just as they had
been when they scored as substitutes against Newcastle in the previous
round of the competition.

Ole
Gunnar Solskjaer, who came on as a sub to win United the Champions
League against Bayern Munich in 1999, seems to have a flair for handling
super-subs as a manager.

Asked
if it had been an inspired substitution, Solskjaer said: 'Good players!
Good players make an impact and the two of them are good players.

'It was a great finish by Fraizer and another one of those runs by Nooney.

'It was probably our best move of the day and it was an instinctive finish by Fraizer, so I'm very happy with that.

'It
is obviously an important part of the job to pick the right team from
the start and think what you are going to do with your subs,' he
continued.

'We have a game on Tuesday and on Saturday, and obviously they were in the back of my mind.

'That is why I picked the team I did today, and we gave those two lads (Noone and Campbell) half a game's rest.

'I
thought it was the right time to put them on because I thought Fraizer
would be able to run down the channels, and we just needed a change.

'In
the first half we did well in terms of possession, but I don't think we
had many shots on goal. We didn't really threaten them in behind, so
something had to happen.'

Asked
what watching United boss David Moyes would have learned about Cardiff,
Solskjaer - who was overseeing his fourth game as Bluebirds manager and
second win - said: 'That we will change a lot of players for Tuesday!
We are trying to implement our new ideas obviously. David will know that
he will be playing against a team that will come there and enjoy it,
will defend well and work hard. That is probably a couple of things he
learned.'

Bolton could
at least be proud of the way they battled back after that 7-1 massacre
by Reading but no one managed a meaningful shot on goal before the
interval.

Manager Dougie
Freedman said: 'When you are playing against this kind of level, you
have to take them, so not going in at half-time a goal up was a bit
disappointing.

'I felt it was because of our performance in the first half that they changed it and brought on two high-quality players.

Catch me if you can: Joe Riley of Bolton chases Cardiff's Mark Hudson as the Wanderers search for an equaliser